![]() KALAMITY KILLS Releases Performance Video For “Afraid”, New Album Arriving September 9th Watch “Afraid” HERE Rising rock force KALAMITY KILLS delivers a crushing blow of raw emotion and defiant energy in the new performance video for their latest single, “Afraid.”. The release comes as anticipation builds for their forthcoming self-titled album, Kalamity Kills (Expanded Edition), out September 9, 2025 via the band’s own Pero Recordings. Produced and mixed by Jamey Perrenot, “Afraid” is a bold and unapologetic anthem of resilience, blending razor-edged guitars with soaring vocals and an unflinching lyrical core. Co-written by Perrenot and longtime collaborator Jamie Rowe, the song is a fierce statement of purpose from a band refusing to back down. “We have been super stoked since the April release of Afraid and the response at radio it has gotten,” says Rowe. “That message of believing and standing up for oneself is always a theme we will touch upon. We had released a cool lyric video but wanted to also have a stand-alone music video. And in the YouTube era, I love that we can bypass “the machine” and go directly to the fans.” “Since day one, we have had a strong DIY ethic. I took on directing, filming, and editing the video myself. At first, I had this big idea for a storyline, but I realized it felt right to keep it simple and real. Just doing what we love in front of a camera. “Afraid” follows the band’s breakout success with “Starry Skies (988)”, which stormed the Billboard Mainstream Rock and Mediabase Active Rock charts, holding a Top 40 spot on Billboard for nine weeks and remaining on the Mediabase charts for twelve. The Expanded Edition of Kalamity Kills will feature brand-new tracks, alternate mixes, and other exclusives available September 9, 2025, on CD in limited quantities. A candy apple red vinyl edition will arrive in April 2026. About KALAMITY KILLS KALAMITY KILLS is a hard rock band forged in the heart of East Nashville, Tennessee. Formed in 2022 by vocalist Jamie Rowe and guitarist/producer Jamey Perrenot, the band emerged from the ashes of a solo project into a fully realized sonic assault—fueled by raw emotion, modern aggression, and a deep respect for rock’s roots. With a sound that fuses the swagger of classic hard rock with the intensity and polish of modern metal, KALAMITY KILLS strikes a rare balance between power and vulnerability. Best known for their debut self-titled album Kalamity Kills, the band quickly turned heads thanks to high-profile collaborations with members of KORN, 3 DOORS DOWN, LA GUNS, CONQUER DIVIDE, and UNDEROATH. Their music has earned national airplay on SIRIUSXM’s Octane, landed on the Billboard Active Rock charts, and crossed over into viral success without ever chasing trends. More than just a studio project, KALAMITY KILLS is a growing force with a full live lineup, including bassist/vocalist Julia Lauren Bullock and drummer Rob Bodley. Their songs—ranging from explosive anthems to brutally honest ballads—tackle themes of faith, failure, hypocrisy, redemption, and the messy beauty of being human. KALAMITY KILLS is for the outsiders, the misfits, the ones who’ve been burned and are still standing. Loud. Unapologetic. Unforgettable. KALAMITY KILLS is: Jamie Rowe – Lead Vocals Jamey Perrenot – Guitar / Producer Julia Lauren Bullock – Bass / Vocals (Live) Rob Bodley – Drums (Live) Track Listing: Anthem Dearest Enemy What’s On Your Mind Dark Secrets The Chemistry of Meant To Be ALIEN Hellfire Honey Burn Sinners Welcome I Still Believe Amen Bonus Tracks: Afraid Starry Skies (988) (feat. Aaron Gillespie from Underoath) Dark Secrets (2025 Version) Dearest Enemy (Pressure) (Scott Bush alt. Mix) The Chemistry of Meant To Be (Kellan McGregor Radio Mix) Jingle Bells (Slay) Connect with KALAMITY KILLS: Website: https://kalamitykills.com Facebook: https://facebook.com/kalamitykills Instagram: https://instagram.com/kalamitykills X (Twitter): https://x.com/kalamitykills Jamie Rowe on X: https://x.com/jamierowe YouTube: https://youtube.com/kalamitykills TikTok: https://tiktok.com/kalamitykills Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/artist/0Q7zrZUeUnTrX0OC2FvTqU?si=qZPINKoURFONBasOc9iB3g Apple Music: https://music.apple.com/us/artist/kalamity-kills/1636401395 |
punk
My Favorite Metal Albums of All Time: Part Four
Here we are at Part Four of this blog series. It’s blazing by. Even though it seems like a lot of work, it’s going by fast, and I am still enjoying writing it. This blog/site is much more enjoyable now that I get to share personal taste, rather than technical reviews of new albums. Reviews are useful for promotion, and I still enjoy doing “mini reviews”. But sharing personal experiences feels much more rewarding and authentic. I feel like these lists of my favorite albums make it easier to understand my taste if I wish to return to reviews. However, after completing these lists and other writing projects, including my first book, I may be taking a sabbatical from writing. This sabbatical will be to pursue other projects such as music, an Instagram page of hobbies, and video projects. I haven’t decided. I am not sure what the rest of the year holds for me. My family and I plan on moving to the city for better access to amenities, healthcare, and shows! So, that may take up most of my time. I can’t wait to see where this year takes me. I am open to any positive change. It has been an immensely challenging ten years for my family and me, and we are ready to make the changes needed to improve our lives. None of that will be done without music, however. And, I don’t plan to ever stop writing about music and sharing my passion in the most genuine way possible.
So, here are the next ten albums of my favorite Heavy Metal albums of all time. As with any post, taste is subjective. I am not aiming to list the greatest albums of all time. These are my favorite albums. These albums are inherent to my life through memories tied to them. Music should always make you feel something. Seek out poignant, deeply resonating, and impactful music that isn’t just about dancing the night away or leaving your significant other. If you need fun music with lighthearted energy, I get it. I listen to it, too, especially while writing romantic arcs in my books and stories. But when it comes to music with depth, Metal is my home to find cerebral, philosophical, and empathetic music. There’s nothing that resonates more with me than Metal music. Maybe if more people realize the power of heavy music and Metal, the world will be a kinder and caring place. Anything that forces you to think differently and see outside of yourself is important. I recommend listening to these albums at least once in your life. Who knows, one of these albums could change your life, as they have utterly changed mine for the better.

21. Beyond- Omnium Gatherum (2013)
As a fan of Melodic Death Metal, it’d be expected to see At the Gates or In Flames on this list. As I said in the intro, conventional is not my jam. While I love those bands and appreciate their contribution to the genre, I have to go with another band for my top thirty. Omnium Gatherum is a band I could listen to their music for an entire month and not tire of it. Having the pleasure of seeing this band live four times now, their energy is unmatched in Melodeath. They bring a completely different atmosphere to a typically nihilistic or melancholy sub genre. Gothenburg Melodeath was a huge revelation for me in my metal journey. This genre is unlike anything else ever created. With bands like Arch Enemy, Insomnium, The Haunted, early Carcass, Dark Tranquility, and more, this genre is a cornucopia of offerings and moods. Omnium Gatherum is like the sun in an otherwise nocturne arena of music. They’re a breadth of ambiance, speed, and empowerment. Other bands of the genre are desolate and decimate your emotions, transporting you to the deep, snowy forests of Scandinavia and Finland. Omnium transports you to places in the skies, the embrace of a long-lost loved one, and the warmth of a fire. These positive and emotive themes are more my style these days. While I enjoy and require the catharsis that dark, angry, and depressive music can only provide, uplifting music creates a balance in my listening habits that is extremely beneficial. Some days, you need battle music or sounds that lift you to conquer whatever you’re dreading. Omnium Gatherum provides that vehemently.
Beyond is an album that is difficult to describe. The album is cavernous in emotion and soaring sounds, and some of the deepest gutturals on the planet. I would’ve never thought Melodeath could be innately soulful. Beyond has more heart than most typical Metal records, and Markus Vanhala is the blood that fuels that heart. His melodic presence on the guitar is unmatched. He creates melodies that stick in your head for months while balancing the heaviness and Speed Metal themes. He is forever on my favorite guitarist list. His tone, his phrasing, and his ability to let the music breathe and not overwhelm it are all spectacular qualities I love about Vanhala. I also enjoy his clean vocals. There is something deeply profound and gratifying about the guitars, synths, and overall sonic atmosphere on Beyond. It definitely sounds as if you’ve ascended to heaven and are attempting to make peace with what you’ve left behind. It also combines the 80s synths of Rush’s Moving Pictures and modern Melodeath and speed metal all in one raw package. I absolutely love the airiness of this record. It is immensely heavy but extremely beautiful. There’s a romanticism to Omnium Gatherum’s music that shines on this album. It’s a sound I can easily get lost in. It’s immersive. It doesn’t get choppy or repetitive. It smoothly flows from track to track. The composition is peak. The little instrumental pre-choruses and verse intros to bridges are masterful, and not a common construction in today’s music.
The personal connection I have with this album, yet again, goes back to spending time with my older brother. This is an album we would put on repeat whilst driving to concerts, playing video games, making art, or just working in the same room. Every time I went to stay at his house between 2013 and 2016, it seemed like we had this album on. I don’t know what it is about this band, but they’ve always brought us together. The memory we still joke about to this day is when we first saw Omnium Gatherum at the Bluebird Theater in Denver, Colorado. I had come to his house the day before Friday, and he was working a half day. He wanted to show me a game before we left to go to the concert. We had this album playing, of course, and it was on the epic last track, White Palace, when his PC suddenly hard locked, and the sound of Jukka’s signature Cookie Monster-like growl was stuck on repeat. It created an unforgettable cacophony of Death Metal growls that is irreplicable and utterly hilarious. I laughed for months about this horrifying sound of a computer dying to the soundtrack of Omnium Gatherum. Since then, we’ve seen Omnium three more times, and each time we’ve screamed “White Palace” right before the band comes on. It is one of our many music-related inside jokes that I will never forget.
Favorite songs: New Dynamic, In The Rim, Who Could Say, The Unknowing

22. Zenith- Seven Kingdoms (2022)
Seven Kingdoms is one of my favorite bands of all time for their speedy technicality, throwback 80s sound, and uniquely emotional Power Metal. This Florida-based band has blended Symphonic, Power, Heavy Metal, Speed Metal, and Hair Metal with Game of Thrones-inspired lyrics since 2007. It was 2009 when powerhouse vocalist Sabrina Cruz joined the band as lead vocalist and made the band completely soar. They signed to Napalm Records for their second album, first with Sabrina at the helm, and the self-titled album was something truly different from anything we’d ever heard before. Seven Kingdoms brings a flair that is unique in the “New Wave of Femme Metal”, which is overrun by a lot of Symphonic Metal with technicality and orchestral elements, but not as much heart. Seven Kingdoms got out from under the pretenses of their contract with Napalm Records after 2017, and this is when the band shot into my radar. This gave them complete control and freedom over the music they truly wanted to make. This led the band to go crowdfunding the making of their albums and pay for big tours with Powerwolf, Unleash The Archers, and headlining tours. Seven Kingdoms’ story is harrowing and awe-inspiring to me. My respect for this band is “Neverending”, and the incredible quality of Zenith in 2022 only made my love for this band grow exponentially.
Zenith is an epic Space Heavy Metal record with insane technicality, speedy dueling guitars, and quality soaring vocals that you cannot get anywhere else. This album is an absolute workhorse. It pummels with riff after riff and hook after hook, unapologetically nodding to the 1980s while adding modern twists. This band has immense energy. It’s completely tangible and infectious. From start to finish, this album is a supernova of emotive vocals and dynamic riffs. This album is literally a monument to how hard this band has worked.to get back from a low point in Power Metal and personal strife. Power Metal has taken a lot of hits from the Metal community over the past decade for being “trite”, “cheesy”, or “formulaic”. The fixation on the elitism of sub genres is truly mystifying to me. Seven Kingdoms isn’t simply just a Power Metal band, and the sub genre is as fantastic as it has ever been because of them. This album has a little bit of everything and dares to break all the rules of Modern Metal. It’s not a chugging, down-tuned, incoherent sound; It’s huge Arena sounds with no filler and no filter. It’s refreshing after so much Deathcore and Metalcore to come back to clean Power Metal with no bull. Variety is key to my listening habits, and Zenith is a cornucopia of different influences and sounds. It ranges from Proggy Power Metal, to speed metal, to space-age Star One style, to 1980s Arena Metal. I love every song on this record individually, and together, it creates a one-of-a-kind listening experience.
Zenith is a record for anyone who’s fallen to their lowest point and is trying to climb out. It is incredibly impactful, and that is definitely due to Sabrina Cruz’s incredibly powerful vocals. Her delivery is soul-deep with intent and fantastic diction. Every word is sung with power and feels heavy coming out of the singer’s lungs. There’s something immensely profound about the way Sabrina sings that is unlike anything I’ve ever heard in Metal. She has a twang to her voice that reminds me of 1970s Southern Rock, giving a homey, comforting feel to the music. This quality sets them apart and catches your ear upon the first note. She is one of the favorite vocalists of all time, regardless of genre. There’s nobody like her, and there’s nothing quite like Seven Kingdoms. Hopefully, Power Metal comes back in a big way, and Seven Kingdoms is carrying the torch. This band deserves 110% more recognition than they receive, and I am hoping in time, more people will discover this diamond of a band.
Favorite songs: Love Dagger, Diamond Handed, A Silent Remedy

23. The Black Album- Metallica (1991)
Yes, I chose Metallica’s “sell-out” album for my favorite Metal album list. Predictable for a ’90s kid? Maybe so. Nostalgia or number of plays aside, The Black album or Self-Titled album is always going to be one of my favorite Metal Records. The notion of a made-up concept of “selling out” is one I have never believed in when it comes to the world of Heavy Music. Heavy music since the fall of Hair Metal in the late 80s/early 90s has struggled to find huge commercial success for the most part. Metallica has stayed successful because of their ability to create the Metal people want to listen to. It’s the Metal we grew up with in a shinier, more compact package without bloat or flashiness. If they dropped the raw Thrashiness of their sound like on Master of Puppets, then so be it. No band can be successful without reinvention, it’s not possible. I never wanted a part two of their older records. I’ve never been a huge fan of Thrash Metal and despise the elitism the genre’s fans have created around it. The Black Album is a perfect mix of Thrash, classic Metallica sounds, and a 90s Heavy Metal sound that set it apart from Grunge, which was huge at the time. To me, Metallica didn’t sell out. They did what they’ve always done; they dared to be different and were heard by the masses with emotive Heavy Metal. And, it worked well. Maybe it’s because I was probably listening to this album before I was even born, when my mom was still carrying me. Maybe it’s because I rediscovered this album at the age of 13, and I learned some songs on my very first bass a year later. But I love this album and always will have a soft spot for it, even though I barely listen to Metallica these days.
While I’ve grown out of Metallica in general, going back to this album and experiencing it again after 10 years is a refresher on my journey. I’ve always loved metal, but this band was on a whole other level for me as a young kid. Their live shows that got uploaded to YouTube were so influential to me. I will never forget watching those with my cousins at all hours of the night in the summer. We idolized this band, and they were the pinnacle of Metal to us then. These were some of the first live Metal concerts I was exposed to. Many firsts came for me with Metallica. Their music just makes you feel unstoppable. It’s powerful. It’s a shot of testosterone. It’s heavy, but also melodic and emotive. It’s complex; not just your typical angry Thrash album, it’s meaningful to me personally. It goes back as far as I can remember. My brother and mom loved this album, and it was a part of the most formative years of my life. I get chills every single time I listen to Nothing Else Matters. This song is at the very core of what I love about Metal: the emotion and meaning that Metal can only harbor for me. They dared to be vulnerable and soft. They dared to be brash, heavy, and loud, and then completely melt you with ballads. This mix is why I love Metal, and I don’t think I knew that until revisiting this album. This album influenced me inherently, but also brought Heavy Metal back to the mainstream, and that contribution should never be taken lightly. The Black Album has sold seven million copies domestically.
The instrumentation overall is fantastic on this record. To me, this is Metallica’s tightest album. They just sound like one heartbeat in perfect synchronization. The Black Album was purged of all the lengthy instrumental parts and the attempts at speed metal in earlier albums. I think if Metallica had switched drummers, maybe they would have progressed with the speedy Thrash influences. Lars Ulrich is a basic beat drummer. He is good at creating a pocket and a backbone, but speed and progression are not his strong suits. The Black Album fits his style to a T. I will never say he’s a bad drummer, because he never misses a beat and always keeps time even when Hammett is going off on his solos. He may not be up to my ridiculously high standards, but The Black Album is flawless in the rhythm section. My favorite part about this album is the bass. Jason Newstead was tasked with the impossible role of Metallica’s bassist after the tragic loss of Cliff Burton in 1986. He shines on this album. My Friend Of Misery is one of my most influential bass lines of all time and one I still warm up with to this day. I will never forget spending countless hours learning this album entirely on bass and cutting my chops as a heavier vocalist.
The Black album contributed to a lifetime of memories with friends and family members and influenced some of my favorite bands like Epica, The Warning, Parkway Drive, Eluveitie, Unleash the Archers, and countless more. I once again can appreciate this album is a whole new light and enjoy listening to it.
Favorite songs: The Struggle Within, Nothing Else Matters, My Friend of Misery

24. Dragonslayer- Dream Evil (2002)
Dream Evil is another band from my early teen years. I am not sure how, but my brother discovered them around the same time as Hammerfall and Lacuna Coil. We had just moved back to Colorado from Arizona in 2004, two years after Dragonslayer came out. This album was played heavily by my brother, and it still sits in his giant CD player in his truck. If there’s a significant music memory worth writing down for me, you can almost always bet my brother, and driving around in his truck is a part of it. There’s a story behind every album and song for me, as it is the way for most people, and that’s why music is so powerful. It can become a part of an era of your life, or just a moment, or at a certain age. This era for me was sound tracked by the bands my brother discovered in College as well as the Pop Punk I was exposed to on MTV and Fuse. These bands were a huge comfort in a very chaotic and uncertain time in my life. Looking back now, music is one of the only things besides movies that helped me feel comfortable in a new house, a new school, and new friends. That’s a powerful connection that I didn’t even realize I had with music back then. So, my music journey truly started when I was just eleven years old. I’ve been emotionally attached to music a lot longer than expected.
Another band on this list from the Metal Mecca of Gothenburg, Sweden, Dream Evil is one of those essential Power Metal bands that have written Metal anthems. Their song “The Book of Heavy Metal (March of the Metallians)” is a song featured in many intros for Wacken Open Air. The legendary band was formed in 1999 by rhythm guitarist and main writer Fredrik Nordstrom, who quickly recruited the absolute beast of a lead guitarist, Gus G of Firewind. While he was only in the band for nearly six years, he made his mark on the sensational sound that became Dream Evil. If you don’t know who Gus G is, he is a virtuoso guitarist with NeoClassical influences and Yngwie meets EVH shredding. He is one of my top twenty favorite guitarists of all time. He has played on so many fantastic Metal albums, including a stint with the Metal God Ozzy Osbourne from 2009 to 2016, before launching his mega-successful solo career. He attributed my favorite Dream Evil and Firewind records before the age of 20. Gus was a huge influence on the success of Dream Evil, but what continued my love for them is lead singer Niklas Isfeldt. Niklas’s vocal delivery is smooth, unwavering, and dynamic. He is a storyteller, much like Dio, who is a huge influence on the band. This is what makes Dream Evil a once-in-a-generation band.
Dragonslayer is an album that sounds exactly like the name and cover portray. If you’re going on an epic quest to slay the dragon that’s been haunting your village for a century, or just battling an ungodly onslaught of rush hour traffic, this is an album you’d put on. It is a soundtrack for the ages. It is bombastic, energetic, and a nonstop barrage of riffs and crisp vocals. This album is one of the few I would ever classify as a Masterpiece. For me, this is one of the greatest Power Metal records ever created. I consider it to be highly influential to today’s Power Metal because of its pristine production quality. Not many records of that era had this level of meticulous mixing, and it meshes very well with my music OCD. It sounds spectacular. Every instrument is crystal clear and perfectly crunchy. The bass is punchy. The vocals occupy the midsection and meld well with tasteful choirs, reverb, and group vocals. The drums are like an 1980s Arena Rock record, and it somehow works perfectly. I love how damn good this album sounds. The way it is engineered and written, it could’ve been released in 1985 or 2016, making it timeless in concept and sound. I love the guitar work with tasteful but epic solos and crunchy driving rhythm. Listening to this, I realize Seven Kingdoms reminds me of Dream Evil, and it makes me love both bands even more.
Admittedly, the main reason I love Dragonslayer so much is a single song on the album. The Chosen Ones is one of my favorite songs of all time. It mixes Symphonic Metal with Power, which is in my wheelhouse.. You add Niklas’s immense range and smoothness to it, and it just hits me in the gut every single time. There’s a depth on this track that I hardly hear in Power Metal, let alone any genre of music. It’s difficult to describe, but it’s as if a Knight has reserved himself to going to hell even after he saved his lands from a nasty dragon. The emotion in it is so tangible, it takes you to the theme of the whole album and immerses you in it emphatically. I love music that transcends time or reality and takes you to a fantasy land. Dream Evil does that well with Dragonslayer. I think it is a must-hear for any Heavy Metal Fan.
Favorite songs: The Chosen Ones, Save Us, The 7th Day

25. Atoma- Dark Tranquility (2016)
As a Melodeath fan, it is impossible to leave Dark Tranquility off of a Favorite album list. They are a quintessential band; maybe part of the “Big 4” of Melodeath. Dark Tranquility began in 1989 under the name “Septic Broiler” until 1990 when they changed their name. The name change was a brilliant move. I don’t think I could ever feel the same way about a band called Septic Broiler as I feel about Dark Tranquility. Their name reflects exactly how their music sounds. Dark Tranquility started in Gothenburg, Sweden, along with fellow trailblazing bands of the genre In Flames, Arch Enemy, and At the Gates. This “Big 4” changed music forever with an entirely new and unique brand of Metal. It combined Thrash, Hardcore, Melodic Metal, and Death Metal in an utterly decimating way. Melodeath is one of the most emotive subgenres in the scene, and Dark Tranquility with Mikael Stanne is a large contributor. This band has a song for everyone who’s experienced something beautiful, something tragic, and painful memories that everyone holds within them. It is pure brutality in poetry, and there’s nothing else like it on the planet. Dark Tranquility is a rare beast indeed, as it is so rare that I love every album in a band’s long catalogue. Each of Dark Tranquility’s albums is a diamond in the rough with immense meaning and excellent writing.
The band has had many lineup changes over the years. Even the original iteration had Anders Friden of In Flames on vocals and Stanne on guitar. My favorite iteration of the band contained original guitarist Niklas Sundin. There’s something about Niklas’ Speed Metal guitars that just drives Dark Tranquility’s energy through the roof. He is also a brilliant album cover artist, doing nearly every album for DT, many for In Flames, Eternal Tears of Sorrow, and over fifty other bands, as well as layouts for Arch Enemy. Niklas is an incredibly artistic and introspective person. His contribution to Dark Tranquillity from the beginning will never be forgotten, and I don’t think the band will ever be the same without him. I loved the new albums without Nilkas, but for me, nothing will ever compare to the artistry and mastery of Atoma.
Atoma is a poetic masterpiece that hooked me from the beginning. Original bassist and rhythm guitarist of the band, Martin Henriksson left the band a year before Atoma was released, marking a huge change in the band’s lineup. I don’t know if this sad departure of Henriksson had anything to do with the exceptional bleakness of Atoma, but it feels like Dark Tranquility hit its stride here. Atoma is a bleak outlook on the decline of value in humanity. For me, it reflects the deep resentment humanity has developed for itself. It marks a split for me where humans no longer value each other, and those remaining with empathy stand alone. This album revived the depth and love for Melodeath, after so many bands had disappointing departures in sound. This album proved that Dark Tranquility is forever. They are inseparable, regardless of how many original members leave. Stanne has a huge hand in this band’s momentous sound and ability to stay profound and current. He is one of my favorite vocalists of all time and one of the most underrated lyricists in music. His lyrics and vocals on Atoma will forever remain in my heart as one of the most important albums in my life. To this day, this album appears in my dreams as a soundtrack to anything from the world ending, horrifying events, and falling in love. This album is peak Melodeath to me, and will always be my favorite Dark Tranquillity album.
Favorite songs: Atoma, Encircled, Clearing Skies

26. Seasons- Sevendust (2003)
Sevendust has been a mainstay of American Metal since 1994, but has never received the recognition that other bands like Mudvayne, Korn, and Godsmack have. They’ve only received one Grammy nomination in 30 years of great songwriting. It is a complete mystery as to why Sevendust isn’t as consistently successful and hasn’t received awards for its unique blend of Rock and Metal. This band is hard to nail down by critics, making it hard to put them in a box of subgenres. I think that’s why this band hasn’t been a bombshell of commercial success. They’re different from their peers. You can’t compare Sevendust to anybody else. I don’t think anyone sounds like them, not even close. They’re a once-in-a-lifetime band that has its own style that can’t be replicated. Bands that dare to mix styles and genres and be themselves unapologetically are my bread and butter. Sevendust is one of those bands that dares to be different, and mixes soulful vocals with deep rhythmic groove, and I just can’t get enough of it after twenty years of listening to this band.
2003’s Seasons is a Nu-Metal album with progressive and groove elements and a gorgeous tone. After the Grunge and Post-grunge parade of toneless and needlessly twangy vocalists, Sevendust’s Lajon Witherspoon brought a gorgeous raw tone that heavy music was lacking. This album is full of aggressive riffs, groovy drum beats, and gorgeous vocals. Out of all the vocal performances on any album besides Evanescence’s Fallen, Seasons is undoubtedly my favorite. Songs like Suffocate and Honesty highlight Lajon’s range, as well as the multi-part harmony Sevendust uses. Clint Lowery’s songwriting is a mountain on this record, it rises so high it’s nearly out of reach. The dark moodiness of it was incredibly heavy and desolate for the times. It was a lot more emotionally impactful for me compared to the other records of the time. Disgrace is especially soul-turning with the vocals and tension in the guitar work. It’s exceptionally moving, and the outro is one of the most devastating pieces of music of the decade. Apart from that, this album is impossible not to headbang to. The pocket Morgan Rose creates is one of the best things in Metal, and the band just flows so smoothly into it. All of their records possess this quality, but Seasons is a uniquely tight record that sets itself apart from anything of the era.
Seasons may not be the best drum record in Sevendust’s catalog, but Morgan Rose remains one of my favorite drummers of all time. He effortlessly blends Progressive beats with immense groove. He always keeps you guessing what he’s going to do next. He’s one of the biggest parts of Sevendust’s unique sound. As co-writer and perfectly harmonized backing vocalist, he crafted Sevendust’s eclectic mix and added well-delivered harsh vocals. This is all crucial to every song, but Face To Face is particularly a shining moment for this accomplished musician. Enemy is also a great, typical Morgan Rose track. I have no idea why this guy hasn’t gone viral for his live performances. He is one of the best drummers I have ever seen live and is immensely fun to watch. He adds so much character to Sevendust and an unpredictability you can only find in Jazz. Sevendust is a special band, and Seasons will always be my favorite work from them. Although their acoustic album, Time Travelers & Bonfires, is a close second, I like the plugged-in punchiness of Seasons.
Favorite songs: Suffocate, Honesty, Enemy

27. Fever- Bullet For My Valentine (2010)
Bullet For My Valentine is one of the biggest genre-defining bands of the early to mid Metalcore era. They have crafted some of the most influential riffs and choruses in Modern Metal. Their impact on the popular Metal scene spans two decades. Metalcore, and bands included in the subgenre like Bullet For My Valentine, have received a bad wrap on the internet by Elitists. To me, the hatred of a corporate genre term is ignorant and completely unfounded. The massive umbrella that is Metal has way too many subgenres. It is pitting groups against each other, which is what I believe the entire system is based on. No one ever became rich and successful without competition, hence the constant need to put bands in a box to create division. BMFV is one of those bands people either love or hate. Whether it’s based on personal preference or the bandwagon to hate metalcore, I have received a bad wrap for liking this band, as well as other bands considered Metalcore. I couldn’t care less what people think, because BMFV has some of the best riffs and songwriting in modern Metal.
I love all of their albums, although the newer ones are not my favorite iteration. But Fever was a highly influential album to me while I was a Sophomore in High School. The darkness and bravado of Fever spoke to me very deeply at the time. It’s still a very chilling album today. This album reminds me of Metallica’s “Black Album” in that it balances raw riffs, heartfelt vocals, and pummeling heaviness while remaining as catchy as Metalcore can achieve. The balance of clean guitar melodies and down-picking riffs is one of my favorite aspects of Metal, and BMFV nailed it on Fever. Matt Tuck and Michael Paget provide hooking, perfectly technical, and Thrashy riffs. They provide a complimentary melody and chunky, groovy rhythms. Fever is a treasure trove of hooks that forever stick. It’s an album that sits on the cusp of “Emo”: With beautiful, heart-wrenching melodies on Bittersweet Memories and A Place Where You Belong, it hits that niche explosion right in the gut. While original fans of the band didn’t care for the departure on Fever compared to Scream Aim Fire, I found it to be a refreshing, diverse balance between the super heavy BMFV and Matt’s alt-metal style vocals. I appreciate bands who want to evolve, and BMFV achieved this hugely on Fever. It’s fast, punchy, gripping, and an extremely cohesive album. A Place Where You Belong and Bittersweet Memories hit me every single time with the emotional diction of Matt Tuck and the melodic licks. In High School, I lived a very isolated life. I didn’t have many friends. The friends I made in Middle School faded away with school changes and me coming out in a Lutheran school. This album was a huge comfort and one of my earliest memories of an experience with catharsis. This album helped me through the loneliness and find the Metal community online.
I was never impressed with the “Emo” bands of the time, nor the Death Metal or many other Metalcore offerings. BMFV hit in between these scenes, while keeping a classic Heavy Metal sound that peaked in the 1980s. That era seemed more vocal-centric and replaced screams with good guitar playing. Bullet dared to keep riffs pure and still put out shredding solos. The music industry has been trying to kill good guitar playing and riffs since the 90s. The Grunge era, despite Jerry Cantrell and Kim Thayil’s offerings, truly popularized lazy noisy riffs instead of technicality. Metalcore in the early 2000s gave the industry the middle finger and made sick riffs and solos anyway. That’s why my appreciation for Metalcore is so profound, and I choose not to believe the haters. BMFV is a band that kept solid and clean guitar playing alive, along with bands like Killswitch Engage, Parkway Drive, and Trivium in the early 2000s. I truly believe that kept Metal alive and kept it mainstream.
Albums like Fever make me think that Grunge and the Telecommunications Act of 1996 didn’t kill Metal, like so many people and I originally thought. Maybe Metal just evolved so much that not everyone was prepared for such a huge advancement and departure after Hair Metal. Maybe BMFV and other industry leaders that were classified as Metalcore hit in between times and generations, and that’s why they get such a bad wrap. They’re not just Heavy Metal, or Thrash, or Emo, or Metalcore, they’re their band that you can’t put in a box. And when people can’t put something in a society-designated box, they get angry. That’s becoming more apparent. Our society is driven by emotion and immediate gratification, and hating on successful bands in the Metalcore scene seems to be a fun, quick, and easy way to get attention or confirmation bias. Whether you like Bullet For My Valentine or not, you can’t deny that their albums have had a huge positive impact on the Metal scene for the past 20 years. I will always appreciate their contributions and the memories I have tied with this legendary band.

28. Disarm the Descent- Killswitch Engage (2013)
I love Metalcore, especially the main bands that popularized the scene. These bands have produced some incredibly meaningful music. Killswitch Engage is the very first band I think of in Metalcore. They are absolute trailblazers of Metal, bringing a new take on a blend of Melodic Metal and Death Metal. They have a unique blend of screaming vocals, melodic vocals, and melodic guitars with chunky riffs. Metalcore is an enormous genre, but to me, KSE is the pinnacle right above Bullet For My Valentine. The band started in 1999 in Massachusetts and began mixing Hardcore Punk, Heavy Metal, and Melodic Vocals. They became local icons very early on, and rightfully so. Their ability to combine so many good influences and put on fantastic, high-energy shows is legendary. There were other bands in the scene doing similar things, and they’re great as well. But KSE’s songwriting and consistency make them stand out to me. There’s a soulfulness to their music that speaks to me more than other bands of that early Metalcore scene. Their depth to capture the forlornness of existence is
As Daylight Dies is one of the most iconic Metal albums ever released. It is highly rated among three generations of Metal fans. Howard Jones brought a new tone and flavor to heavy music that was unlike anything I’d ever heard before. I’d been searching my entire life for music like KSE’s Melodic Metalcore. Their music is a huge influence on my music taste as well as my love for guitars and vocals. Songs like This is Absolution, The Arms of Sorrow, and My Curse put KSE in my top ten all-time favorite bands for fifteen years. My brother and I discovered this band, as many others did, from the horror action hit Resident Evil: Apocalypse soundtrack. The song was The End of Heartache, and it blew my mind in 2004. From there, it was all about KSE for a long time for me. I don’t think I realized how huge and early on their impact was for me until I started this article. While I didn’t choose the early albums for this list, they’re still a big deal in my life. These albums helped shape Metal and take it in a new direction. For me, this band has been instrumental in helping me overcome any obstacles I have faced. I might’ve been too young at the time to fully understand it. This band stayed with me. As Daylight Dies will always be one of my favorite albums, but I didn’t pick it for this list. Another album personally impacted me more than words can ever express.
KSE released Disarm the Descent when I was 20 years old. It was a big time in my life. I had just started treatment for the depression I’d been suffering from since High School. I was just starting to realize my off and on long distance relationship was toxic. I had just fallen back in love with soccer, specifically the United States’ Women’s National Team and the new budding National Women’s Soccer League. I started getting back in shape and taking care of my mind, body, and spirit. I left the toxicity behind. And, Disarm the Descent was a soundtrack to my healing and growing. This album was played every day for six months. Whether it was for a road trip to see a game, a concert, or family, this album was in the car CD player. While I was devastated that Howard Jones left KSE and music due to health problems, I quickly found a new bond with original singer Jesse Leach. This guy is a force of nature. His voice, scream, and lyrics are unmatched in Metal.. To compare anyone to Howard Jones is ridiculous, so I never compared the two singers. I loved both iterations equally. Disarm The Descent hit me at the right time, where I just wanted new KSE. Little did I know, it’d become one of my favorite Metal records of all time.
I’m glad I didn’t focus too much on the order of this list. In order, this album should be much higher in importance. It is vital to my mental health to this day. I listen to this album, and it centers me every time.. No matter how chaotic or dark life gets, this album is a fire in the darkness. It is a perfectly crafted storm of emotion and riffs, and brilliant dynamic vocals. Every song gets better with time. In Due Time is a hit for the ages with pure emotion, almost reading like a power ballad, but it’s a motivational speaker’s anthem. It is one of the most inspiring songs of all time, especially for a late bloomer like me. This album is written for anyone who’s ever struggled with inner demons. Jesse Leach and the incomparable Adam D on lead guitars wrote one of the most profound albums. I think a lot of people slept on this album, unfortunately, because this is the peak of their songwriting with Jesse. Many Metalcore albums have tried to reach this songwriting depth, but I don’t think it’s possible. Songs like The Hell In Me, A Tribute to the Fallen, and Always are among my favorite songs of all time. These songs are masterpieces, for lack of a better word. They are so epically satisfying for me to listen to. They hit the perfect spot for me of heavy and melodic. It’s emotional, lighter, and immensely inspiring. I love this album and every single song. KSE outdid themselves with this album. Disarm the Descent is my favorite Metalcore album of all time.

29. The Storm Within- Evergrey (2016)
2016 is among my favorite years in music of the decade (2010-2020). I feel like music took a big leap in innovation. Prog peaked in 2016 with albums from Opeth, Haken, Porcupine Tree, Dream Theater, and so many more legendary bands. This was a particularly good year for me, for the most part. I was on fire with writing, attended some great shows, became close with my best friend, and we decided to go full-time to commit to moving out of my childhood home. Things were looking up in the meantime. Although I discovered that dealing with change is not one of my strong suits. These changes and the amount of work I was putting into everything caused great anxiety. I hadn’t had much anxiety since high school. 2016 was full of change and relationships that made me vastly uncomfortable. That’s when Evergrey came into my life, and they lulled the anxiety more than any band before. 2016 was a bittersweet year. While overall it had good points, the anxiety for me peaked here and didn’t calm until ten years later. The Storm Within will always be a positive memory from this year, however.
When Evergrey released The Storm Within, I was doing a lot of music reviews. I received this album from Napalm Records’ promo list. I had never heard of the band and was excited to find something new. What caught my interest about the album was two tracks featuring the great Floor Jansen, who was my favorite singer at the time. The song In Orbit immediately caught my ear. This was the first song I listened to from Evergrey. I was blown away by Tom Englund’s soaring and soulful vocals and the bluesy guitar solos. The bridge is truly one of my favorite pieces of music ever written. From there, I was hooked on The Storm Within. Distance perfectly sums up any long-distance relationship with tasty chugging guitars and a Pantera-like groove. I could listen to this song as well as In Orbit on repeat for days, and never tire of it. They give me butterflies and back-of-the-head chills with every single listen. There is something deeply special about Evergrey’s music. The heartfelt diction of Tom Englund’s voice and smooth delivery is what makes it special. It is a melodic triumph. Their music hits an emotionally similar place as The Police’s Every Breath You Take, Simon and Garfunkel’s The Sound of Silence, Nights In White Satin by the Moody Blues, and Nina Simone’s cover of House of the Rising Sun. It is difficult to describe Evergrey. It’s a unique experience with music. The song that explodes this sentiment into the atmosphere is The Paradox of the Flame, a ballad featuring the gorgeous vocals of sister Carina Englund. This song is one of the most devastatingly beautiful things I have ever heard.
Evergrey’s songwriting is masterful to my ears. They can cover such a range of influences from Doom, to Symphonic, to Hard Rock, to Prog Metal. This band can bend any genre to make a song impactful. Their music stays with you. It’s a lingering thought, like a dream you remember for the rest of your life. The Storm Within is one of those perfect albums that only come once in a lifetime. I have no idea why it didn’t go Platinum in most countries. It deserves far more credit and recognition than it has ever received. This album deserves radio play. It deserves awards. But like with anything beautiful and deep, it falls under the radar. Corporate music thrives on quick money, something basic and formulaic that is a crowd pleasure. If they put the same budget into promoting bands like Evergrey, the payoff would be immeasurable over time. I truly believe that bands like Evergrey deserve more recognition. More people just need to give this music a chance, because it might change their lives. Maybe with music so profound and all encompassing, the obsessive need to take in social media, politics, news, and be overwhelmed by the negativity of society would fade. This music has a chance to impact humanity, and I wish people would realize the gravity and quality of Evergrey.

30. Abrahadabra- Dimmu Borgir (2010)
2012 was a big year for me in Music. It was also the year I graduated from High School and decided to skip college. The discovery of European music had me on a high. It seemed Euro Metal was on a roll, as well as my love for Stone Sour, Evanescence, and Halestorm. My taste was highly evolving, and that opened me up to the world of Death Metal. Cradle of Filth, Epica, Insomnium, System Divide, and Dimmu Borgir came into my radar. I went to Colorado Springs to see Halestorm headline a show at the famous local dive bar, The Black Sheep. It is one of the last small venues Halestorm ever played. It was a great show. From there, I spent a week with my brother on a summer vacation. This is when more music discoveries happened that would forever change my life. Getting into Death Metal in 2012 would impact my music taste and my life for the foreseeable future. Death Metal and its subgenres would go on from 2012 to inspire me almost more than any genre of music in my lifetime. I had already experienced forms of it with Fear Factory, Early Within Temptation, and After Forever, but Dimmu Borgir took my appreciation to a whole new level.
Abrahadabra is a Symphonic Death Metal album that combines the drama of Mozart with Norwegian Black and Death Metal. The mix has a shock factor to it, which made it popular in early reaction videos, especially the live performances with an orchestra. Dimmu Borgir took two very intense sections of music and combined them. This mix is brilliant to me. Both aspects have to be truly technically perfect to work, and Dimmu Borgir is just on the money with it. Gateways blew my mind from the get-go. The speed of this song was unlike anything I’d ever heard. Fear Factory is fast, but Dimmu Borgir’s blast beats just seemed even faster to me back then. Combine this with a cluster of shrill violins, horns, and a choir, and it’s a match made in heaven (or more fittingly in this context, a match made in hell). The costumes and face paint added another thing to the grand and horrific ambience of Dimmu Borgir to me, and it hooked me. It was like a perfect soundtrack to Dante’s The Divine Comedy: Inferno. Abrahadabra is the first Death Metal album I ever purchased. This album led me to countless more discoveries..
Gateways was literally a gateway to a whole new world for me. This track featured vocals from Agnete Kjølsrud. Her vocals are some of the most harsh and interesting vocals I’ve ever heard to this day. She sounds like a priestess right from hell or an imp. And her scream on this just completely blew my mind. I’d never heard a woman sing like that. I think this is one of the most important discoveries in my life, because it led me to find more female vocalists like her. I think this opened me up to the world of female harsh vocals. This was an origin story for me. Honestly, if I’d never heard this song, I don’t think my uncorrupted brain would’ve been open to bands like Arch Enemy, Spiritbox, Jinjer, and most importantly Ankor. I had always loved harsh vocals deep down. I’d been doing them as a joke since I was a kid, because my brother dabbled in harsh vocals as a teen, and I thought it was hilarious. When I started taking it seriously, harsh vocals became one of my favorite things in my life. Deep down, I always wonder if it’s something I should pursue as my small pension to be able to do them in multiple types and ranges without much effort. Regardless of whether I ever pursue them, Agnete will always be a huge influence on me.
While Abrahadabra wasn’t a hugely emotional album for me, it lured me into more Technical, darker, Neo-Classical influenced Metal. Their proficiency at what they do is still mind-blowing. I love to watch people in Music, sports, and Art who are at the pinnacle of their craft. Dimmu Borgir is one of those bands that is just perfect live, despite the chaotic nature of their music. While this album wasn’t well received by Dimmu Borgir’s cult of fans or critics, I still think it’s their best contribution to music. This is still one of my favorite Death Metal records of all time. I will be forever grateful to my brother and Dimmu Borgir for exposing me to this extreme form of art and music. My life would not be as joyous, cultured, or well-balanced without it.
What are your favorite Metal albums? Let me know below!
New Music Discoveries: Metal and Rock Releases You Can’t Miss
Here’s a short list of new singles and videos to check out! It’s approaching spring which is always a big release time of the year. A lot has been coming out, it’s hard to keep track of it all. There are new releases from Lacuna Coil, Killswitch Engage, All That Remains, and many more that I’ve been delving into. I am considering sharing my thoughts in a Review sampler once in awhile. Right now, I am working on “Part 2” of my Favorite Heavy Metal Album list, but life stresses have made it difficult for me to focus. I plan to finish it next week. That’ll be one of the last lists for awhile
So, here’s a list of new music and my latest discoveries!
Awesome Orchestral Cover of Metallica
American Melodic Metal Releases New Collab single, Algorithm Recommendation To Me
Modern Progressive Metal Band Shocks with new Groove Oriented Track
American Progressive Metal Band Releases New Single. Killer song with great riffs and vocals
KSE is back and tackling the System. I want to like this new record, but the mix killed it. What do you think?
Papa Roach Drop New Compelling Single, Bringing back the 2000s Rock with good hooks
Italian Heavy Metal band Deathless Legacy Drops Gorgeous New Emotive Single
French Metalcore band LANDMVRKS and Mat Welsh from While She Sleeps
My Second Most Streamed song of February, New Prog Metalcore Discovery
The Ocean – Unconformities an instrumental Prog Track gets vocals
Discover My Favorite Rock Albums of All Time 2
I have been delving into Rock the past year once again after a long sabbatical. I decided to make a detailed list of my absolute favorite Rock albums. While lists are the internet’s favorite way of getting a shit-ton of views and pissing people off in the process, I love sharing my favorite music with people. Hopefully, someone connects with my taste or opinion positively. I am focusing on the traditional idea of rock on this list, with a couple of heavy metal/hard rock albums here. I consider Rock to be entirely its own thing from Metal most of the time, usually containing more clean vocals, slow songs, and a strict time signature and song structure. I don’t know if that’s a fair or correct observation of genre differentiation, but it’s just how my brain processes the deciding factors on what is Rock and what is exclusively Metal. I changed this list so much over the past three weeks. I thought about the genre difference, what made me love the album, and why it’s one of my favorites.
THIS IS NOT A BEST OF LIST: These are just 20 of my favorite Rock albums. It’s not me telling people what I think is better than anything else out there. This is not a posturing of opinion and knowledge. I’m just a writer who is ultra-passionate about music. I like to get as personal and as real as possible with my writing, and this is such a good way to do so! Do not get riled up because one of your favorites isn’t on the list. It doesn’t mean I don’t love your favorite record. Maybe I haven’t even heard of it yet, so please let me know your favorites in the comments below! I would love to know what albums everyone holds most dear. Always remember music is incredibly subjective, and that the taste is unique to the individual for a whole host of personal reasons. I am a product of a Prog, Jazz, and Classical fan and a complete Metal Head. I like music that makes me feel something deeply and makes me think at the same time. I don’t go for fun, light-hearted, dance-worthy, catchy music. I go for music that means something, that is a contribution to the industry.

11. We Are Not Alone- Breaking Benjamin
When making a shortlist of my favorite Rock albums, this one had a question mark beside it. Then, I listened to it again, and immediately removed the question mark and knew it had to be on here. Pennsylvanian Hard Rock band, Breaking Benjamin is one of those bands; you either love them or hate them. I love this band and everything they’ve put out since 1998. They’re one of the most solid bands in Rock, and I prefer them to a lot of bigger Rock Bands of their generation. This band is just so tight, much like Disturbed, Mudvayne, and Red Hot Chili Peppers. But they sound nothing like those bands. They’re very unique with Ben Burnley’s raspy, clean vocals and epic pulse rocketing growls, and Mark James Klepaski’s thumping bass lines, they stand out far above most of the post-Grunge bands for me. Ben also has a unique almost Irish accent when he sings, which gives the band their own identity amongst the slew of American Alt-Rock scenes. It was hard to pick which album of theirs to put on this list, but I figured I should stick with my love for David Bendeth’s albums. I picked this album over Phobia because it’s the album I immediately think of when talking about Rock. Phobia had strong singles, but We Are Not Alone is a perfect album I can listen to back to back on repeat and not tire of.
Most people would never even consider We Are Not Alone as a great album, but I do, especially now more than ever. This album has so many qualities that I severely miss. The bass on this record is unbelievably good. The bassist on this record sounds so much like Ryan Martinie, it’s uncanny. Not many albums today have great bass or even audible bass because it just blends in with down-tuned seven and eight strings. When you do this, you lose a lot of groove, mid-range, and low dynamics, and it sounds muddy. Sure this wall of low sound is shockingly heavy, but it’s becoming old and stale. I want more bass. I want more crisp guitars. Breaking Benjamin provides that in the smoothest transitions. This album is clear and I can hear each instrumentalist. The vocals blend in so well, too. Nothing is out of place. It all just works together as an incredibly cohesive record with well-rehearsed chemistry. Ben is a very skilled vocalist, adding so much range atop a very groovy rhythmic sound they’ve achieved without becoming repetitive. It’s balanced between melodic and rhythmic, a very rare achievement in modern music. Another part is due to the fantastic drumming on this record by Jeremy Hummel, who is not an average Rock drummer. He has so many accents, flam, and cool breakdowns that stand a cut above in the genre to me. I don’t understand the hate for We Are Not Alone, as it is just pure Rock with a lot of heart and great vocals that anyone could relate to. This is a must-have album for any Rock fan. I think this album came out during the time I started playing bass, and that’s why it’s stuck with me so much. It was something to aspire to as a bassist in modern times where bass is no longer a cool instrument.
Favorite Tracks; Sooner or Later, Cold, Firefly

12. Hybrid Theory- Linkin Park (2000)
This album is on millions of peoples’ lists because it is such a genre-defining album that crosses every boundary in Rock. Linkin Park took what Run DMC and Aerosmith did in 1986, and extremified it to a level we’d never heard before. I was only seven when this album came out and it started to dominate the radio shortly after. There was this great Rock station in Phoenix, Arizona that my family and I listened to a lot, and they started playing Linkin Park probably before anyone else. When I first heard them, I don’t think my young brain knew what was going on, but I loved it anyway. Linkin Park is one of those bands that creates good music with meaningful songs that just about anyone can relate to. They balance catchy Rap and vocal lines with Hard Rock synthesizers and Rap beats. It’s a lot to wrap your head around, so it makes you think. It is so catchy and influential, that my dad can pretty much rap the whole album word for word even to this day. That’s how much we listened to this album when I was growing up. While being catchy, the music and delivery forces you to listen to the lyrics. I think that’s a rare feat in modern music, where lyrics tend to be repetitive or just for show or basic storytelling. Nothing about this band is basic or just for show. They are a full cerebral, emotional, and deeply interesting band. Linkin Park is a diamond in the rough of mainstream modern music and impacted me so greatly for twenty years.
Hybrid Theory is an obvious choice for so many Rock fans and it is mainstream going twelve times Platinum in the USA alone. It doesn’t sound like your typical mainstream Rock album, though. It has so much more depth and variation compared to other records at the time. Not just a mix of Rap and Rock, it stands on its own creating a whole fusion of so many sounds. It’s a little bit Grunge, it’s a little bit Emo, it’s a little bit Industrial, and Nu Metal underneath a lot of in-your-face energy. Hybrid Theory is incredibly aggressive, heart-wrenching, and sticks in your head forever. I like anything that challenges the mind or challenges the constructs that big Record companies make up. Linkin Park played by their own rules. The chorus of Crawling has never left my head, because of Chester’s long drawn-out notes with gravel. You can hear more pain in this man’s voice than Blues singers. His voice is still unlike anything I’ve ever heard and nobody can ever replace him. Mike Shinoda has a genial rhythmic way to his Rap lines, and the way he and Chester complement each other on this record is incomparable chemistry. They just flowed so incredibly well. They made Rap listenable to me, which is an extremely hard feat. Very few artists have made me appreciate that style of music. I love every album they’ve put out with Chester, but Hybrid Theory will always have a special place in my heart. Nothing will ever diminish the impact Chester had on modern music, and Linkin Park will never be the same without his heart and his voice.
Rest in Peace, Chester
Favorite Tracks; Paper Cut, Crawling,

13. Superunknown- Soundgarden (1994)
I don’t think there’s a lot of bigger influential records than Superunknown. Between Chris Cornell’s legendary screams, Blues Rock vibes, and supreme vocal spectrum and Kim Thayil’s groove-oriented high-octane guitar riffs, this was an album with a recipe for success. The bleakness and depression of the Grunge era was magnified by a thousand suns when Soundgarden came into the scene. They mix pain, beauty, anger, and indifference with Blues Soul to create a unique unreplicable atmosphere. This is the first time I’ve ever been able to sit down and listen to a Soundgarden record in full because their music is just so intense for me to listen to, I didn’t have the heart after Chris took his own life. I knew one of their records had the potential to end up on this list, so I put it on here just on principle alone. Now that I sit down and listen to it, I understand why this is an essential album for guitar players and why it ends up on so many lists, and find myself completely entranced by Soundgarden. There’s a reason why this is one of the biggest Rock records ever made, but I didn’t know of its popularity and prowess until recently. I had no idea how big this album was when it came out in March of 1994. It just doesn’t feel like a commercially successful album in all the right ways. It’s not contrived or watered down, it’s not a product of Nirvana. It’s something of its own identity and entirely like nothing I have ever heard in my life. Superunkown is the most real and raw album I have ever listened to in my entire life, and it becomes more complex the more I listen to it. Musically this album is genial in every track, but the message is even more mind-blowing than the music.
I am sitting listening to Superunknown as if I were the producer listening to Chris, Kim, Ben, and Matt’s demos, but in an emotionally vulnerable state. It’s my first listen of what will be many, trying to compartmentalize this record of immense influences, weird guitar tunings, and crazy time signatures that were all unintentional. This album is both a celebration of life and the observance of the utter pain of existence, and the deeper celebration of death. It’s quirky as are most Grunge records, and yet so immensely profound in the time of the Mental Health Crisis in America. The more I listen to this album, I find that this album does something very important that Popular Modern music isn’t doing. It’s tapping into catharsis and accepting that dark feelings and thoughts are a part of the human condition. This album doesn’t glorify darkness, but simply audibly magnifies it by a thousand times and eloquently explains how to accept it. In a time where the media glorifies suicide and tells us we should utterly hate ourselves and each other for destroying the planet, this album so bluntly says “fuck it, we’re going to let ourselves feel this, and be okay anyway.” Superunknown to me is about embracing the most difficult feelings, but also seeing the hope in the juxtaposition of life and death. It’s about trying to live fully, despite everything including our psyche telling us we should die. It’s bleak, but it’s ultimately hopeful. Those intangible feelings that you cannot articulate to friends and family for fear that you’ll scare them, this album is a haven for those feelings. And that’s why this album is so great, Chris Cornell articulated these feelings and gave us something invariably relatable and exponentially meaningful.
Superunknown is experimental, sonically complex, and conceptually deep beyond ninety-nine percent of commercially accepted albums today. It defies everything I thought I knew about popular music. Assuming Superunknown was too deep and ornate for commercial success, I did a disservice to the true taste and nature of people. It makes me realize that if this album can debut at number one on the charts in the 1990s, there’s something wrong with the music industry today and not the listeners. I think the charts, radio stations, and promotional commercial success are being controlled by the big record companies. I think when Bill Clinton initiated the Communications Act in 1996, just two years after Superunknown debuted at number one, it took all the money in the music industry and gave it to the 2%, the biggest record companies and radio stations. When that Act was passed, smaller up-and-coming Rock acts were shut out because these conglomerate companies who specialize in Top 40 style music that is created by the same twelve producers truly pay for popularity. Superunknown getting fair and well-deserved radio play is what led to its immense success, and Rock bands simply don’t get that airtime anymore. I think if bands like The Warning, Plush, Seven Kingdoms, Clutch, Sevendust, and more got the same airtime as Taylor Swift, they would overtake music entirely and Rock would become the biggest seller like it was in the 1980s. There’s nothing wrong with “Rock Music today”, except that Pop producers use their money to shut out independent artists. We need albums like Superunknown back on the radio. We need true artists selling music to the masses again and we need albums like Superunknown to inspire this conversation. We need music that is emotionally impactful back on the radio.
Rest in Peace, Chris Cornell
Favorite songs: The Day I Tried To Live, Mailman, Limo Wreck

14. Ten- Pearl Jam (1991)
There is something I just love about Pearl Jam that is inexplicable. Everything critical tells me I should hate this band. Nothing about this band fits together, the Classic Southern Rock guitars with grungy distortion, an unintelligible singer, and quite a progressive song structure make absolutely no comprehensible sense. Now they’ve gone New Age and New Wave and I still weirdly like some of the songs. Yet, when I think of great albums, this is one of the first ones that comes to mind. This album takes influence from everything American, adds the storytelling qualities of Dylan and Young and throws a Hard Rock edge with immense groove. It works, but it’s weird. None of the songs fit or flow together. It’s like a bunch of abstract demos kinda thrown on a record, but maybe that’s why I like it so much. It goes against every grain of mainstream music, and yet the singles ended up on the radio. It is one of the rawest records I have ever heard. Eddie Vedder sounds like he’s in physical pain while singing some of the songs, especially the opening song Once, which is one of the heaviest Grunge songs I’ve heard. Eddie Vedder may not be the best singer and lacks any diction, but he can put more feeling into a lyric than most people ever express in their entire life. I think that’s why the cult following for Pearl Jam grew. They write relatable music that doesn’t throw an agenda or a message in your face. Despite the recent hatred of this band and record in particular on the internet, it is still one of the best-selling Rock albums of all time going thirteen times Platinum. Love them or hate them, Ten is a corner piece of Rock.
Ten is a compilation of songs that kick ass and are a freight train of emotion. Not necessarily the most fluent of albums, it’s a chaotic formula of music that was created in a specific place and time of this band’s life. They all came from other bands that had not seen much success and suffered a lot of turmoil. You can hear the anger, the pain, the desperation, and the internal struggles of the band members so loudly on this record. It’s abrasive, it’s dark, it’s crushing, and it’s soul bare. A lot of Grunge-era albums went for such a sound, so it’s not surprising to hear on a 1991 release, but I don’t think people realized just how immensely deep and tragic this record is. When you learn the subject matter of the songs, it becomes hard to listen to. I mean, who wasn’t traumatized by Jeremy when the video came out? And, that’s not even the saddest song on the record for me: Black takes that prize tenfold, being one of the most painful songs I have ever heard. Eddie Vedder’s lyrics, vocal range, technique, style, and openness made Black an anthem of the Grunge era. I didn’t realize any of this until I started working on this article and listening to the words and emotions. Now, listening to this album critically for three playthroughs, I truly think this is one of the greatest albums ever written and it deserves all the credit it has received. It isn’t just a Grunge album, it’s a place in time. It’s a historical memoir of four very broken people, and it reminds you of all the times you’ve felt broken, too. Then, Oceans come on, and it’s a relief to that absolute crushing heaviness, and it’s complete catharsis. Ten reminds me of why I love music so deeply. Music speaks louder than words every single time. The more I listen to this record, it becomes my favorite album of the Grunge Era.
Favorite Tracks: Black, Even Flow, Jeremy, Oceans

15. Moving Pictures- Rush (1981)
The debate whether this album belongs on my upcoming list of “My Favorite Metal Albums” is something I’ve been to over a dozen times. The deciding factor for putting it on a Rock list was ultimately the vocals and guitar style. That’s just my take on this particular record. Rush toes the line between Prog Rock and Metal throughout the rest of their career after this record. I think of Rock and Metal as brothers with different family trees that get farther apart as time goes on from the early days with Black Sabbath and Deep Purple. Whatever genre people want to put Moving Pictures into, it’s a keystone of music and the use of Progressive themes in heavy music. People either hate Rush and Geddy Lee’s uniquely high vocals or are completely die-hard fans who foam over the band every chance they get. I don’t even have to explain or elaborate on the legacy of this band, because everybody knows them and Neil Peart’s sensational drumming. They changed music forever, whether you like them or not, they probably influenced one of your favorite bands to pick up music. Like so many people, I grew up listening to Rush, and especially this album in particular. I cannot count how many weekends I spent around my dad’s garage working on a car or speakers listening to this album over and over. I don’t even know how many times one of us has picked a song from this album for our weekly “Music Night”. They’re a band my whole family loves and honors regularly. One of my biggest regrets is my family and I never got the chance to see them live together.
Moving Pictures is one of my many favorite Rock albums of the 1980s. The 80s had some of the best musicianship of the century, and some huge misses as well. Being a Progressive music fan, the epic variety on this album is what gets me every single time. Rush threw out the rule book, the idea of genre, and commercialism under a giant bus with Moving Pictures. It’s weird, it’s chaotic, and it is so loud in the best way possible. It’s a larger-than-life record with only three members. A power trio allows each member to shine. There’s something about the way these bands are mixed and how a great bassist such as Geddy Lee gets to be heard without eighty-five layers of down-tuned guitars. The mastering of this band is legendary. The mix on this album is one of my top five favorite mixes of all time. I think a lot of bands try to replicate this clear, loud, and dynamic mix, but not very many have achieved it except the likes of Devin Townsend, Leprous, The Warning, and Sick Puppies. It took four people to mix and master this album, and the quality of engineering truly shows. They achieved an album that sounds good on any medium; From 8 Track to vinyl, to Walkman, to Radio, to Streaming, this is a mind-blowing sounding record. That is a rare feat for any album, let alone a Progressive one.
Everything about this album is perfect to my ears. I don’t understand how Alex Lifeson doesn’t end up on every “Best Guitarists” list, especially for his work on Moving Pictures and Clockwork Angels. He effortlessly switches from heavy riffs to licks, to melodic lines with the smoothness of Santana. I rarely see Lifeson credited, maybe because Geddy and Neil were just so loud and had more presence than most musicians combined, but that doesn’t mean he isn’t as good. Lifeson is one of my favorite guitarists of all time and drastically stood out against the egomaniacal “wanky” guitarists of the 1980s. Don’t get me wrong, I love crazy solos and shredding, but I also like a guitarist who just plays great riffs and licks that add to the music without taking it over. Rush is a band with three incredible members who play effortlessly together. They’re a true Prog jam band who can just pick a key and play together and improvise. Bands don’t play like this anymore. Moving Pictures is an essential Rock album that I will pass down to my niece and my hypothetical children to preserve this flawless band of rare talent. I could go on and on about Rush and Moving Pictures, and words will never be enough to explain how incredible this album is and how much it has impacted every aspect of my life.

16. Self Titled- Boston (1976)
An album I think will always be timeless is Boston’s first record. It sounds just as fresh now as it did in the 1970s. This was exponentially heavy for the mid-1970s and was one of the first albums to be recorded by a “bedroom musician”. Guitarist and Vocalist Tom Scholz went to MIT and graduated with a degree in Engineering, but always wanted to write music. So, he built his recording studio in his basement and tricked Epic Records into thinking he and Brad Delp were recording it in a professional studio. Most of the songs on the album are constructed from Tom’s demos. He was the original underground musician who dared to defy the constraints of labels and pioneered Hard Rock. It took about a year to complete the album with great producer John Boylan, but it was all really Scholz’s handiwork that made this record. I can’t believe this album came out in the 1970s and it was recorded at one guy’s home. It’s phenomenal for the time, and still a great sounding album today that I don’t think parents are passing down enough. The story behind the album is about self-perseverance, hard work, and tenacity to get what you want out of life. The theme is blatant throughout the record and comes off as truly inspiring and incredibly well thought out.
Boston is an album with flawless engineering, catchy hooks, progressive elements, and a lot of heart. It is an instant American classic that has dominated radio stations for forty years. You can still hear More Than A Feeling probably every time you turn the radio on. It’s a short album only clocking at thirty-seven minutes, and yet its replay-worth far surpasses its eight-track shortness. This album sounds like a nostalgic “American Pie” mixed with the complexity of the music of Yes and Genesis. It’s one thought throughout the album, so it flows from track to track with energy and fluency. What makes this album so great to me is the guitar work. Tom’s guitar tone stood out from others with the use of reverb, fuzz, and dual tracking that we’d only heard on a couple of Eagles and Lynyrd Skynyrd songs. It was inventive at the time it came out. There wasn’t anything quite like it and still isn’t to this day. The mix of acoustic and multi guitar layering is something we hear all the time now, but in 76 this was revolutionary “Wall of sound” type mastering. The vocals were engineered the same way, sometimes having up to five layers of harmonies and echoes. This level of craftsmanship set Boston apart from everyone else, and I think a lot of bands were seriously influenced by their sound. It’s a little big Prog, with some Arena Rock, and some Southern Rock that makes it just ingrained in my brain forever. To my ears, this is one of the best mastered records of all time still to this day and I still haven’t heard anything quite as crisp. This is an album I will always come back to for my entire life.
Favorite songs; More Than A Feeling, Foreplay/Long Time, Piece of Mind

17. Epicloud- Devin Townsend Project (2009)
Epicloud may be a little more on the Heavy Metal side, but it’s purposefully the most accessible Devin Townsend record to date. None of my favorite music lists are complete without Devin, so I had to include his answer to Radio Rock on this list. Devin Townsend is an artist I didn’t discover until later in life, but he’s become my most essential artist of all time. Devin Townsend Project was his sort of idea of a supergroup that began in 2008. The idea of having a frequent touring Metal band that could put out albums fairly quickly and generate hype, without sacrificing the quality of Progressive Metal was a great one in the beginning. Of course, none of Devin’s albums are created with the formulaic hive mind that controls our Radio stations, and his over-engineering “: mad man” qualities didn’t translate to as big of an audience as Century Media anticipated. The band never got the funding it deserved to be able to continue. This was due to terrible marketing by labels and possibly Devin over-explaining his projects to the point of it being quite overwhelming to listeners. I love Devin and I love hearing about the process, but sometimes leaving some things to mystery so people can just connect with it emotionally is good, too. Regardless, this project put out some of my favorite records to date and there’s a magic that will never diminish or be replicated.
When you put a bunch of highly skilled Prog musicians in a pressure cooker with Devin Townsend, Epicloud is what comes out of it. It’s genial in every sense of it. It’s catchy, heavy, riff-orientated, and sing-along-worthy. But, it’s not shallow or stale in any way. It’s light, airy, atmospheric, and incredibly well constructed. The first time I heard this album, it captured all of my senses and blew my mind to the point I didn’t listen to anything else but Devin’s music for a good eight months. There’s nothing like the overall experience of Devin’s music. It is all-encompassing. It is soul-crushing. It’s a wall of completely overwhelming sound, and it’s not for everyone, but it is everything to me. Epicloud is a perfect mix of everything Devin but toned down just a little. Epicloud is just enough to get the sense of this man’s brilliance, without completely overstimulating your brain. It’s interesting, highly layered, and sonically perfect for my taste. It’s just engaging and cerebral enough to where it’s not “phoned” in but still has catchy qualities to catch passersby’s ears. Is it as profound and well-engineered as his other works? No, but if you take it for what it is as a DTP release, it’s still going to blow your mind and end up an earworm for weeks. It’s Devin Townsend with some 80s Arena Rock, and featuring one of his absolute best works Kingdom which is a Progressive Heavy Metal Opera tune for the ages. I think it’s his most famous song, and rightfully so. This song is the pure embodiment of everything Devin is, and the version of it on Epicloud is one of his most pristine contributions. If you’re a Freddie Mercury fan, you have to hear this song. It’s Freddie Mercury Metalfied, and that is a huge testament to Devin’s “god-like” vocal ability. There are so many special and legendary qualities to Epicloud, but I truly think Devin’s voice is what propels this album to greatness. His voice mixed with Anneke Van Giersbegen’s angelic belting on this album as well as the previous Addicted! Is simply one of the greatest duos I have ever heard. He is my favorite male vocalist of all time, and songs like Kingdom, Grace, and Hold On are fantastic examples. If you haven’t heard Devin Townsend, you are missing out on one of the greatest minds the world has truly ever seen. Is it music for the masses? Not by today’s standards, but everyone should open their mind and discover this uplifting delight of an album.
Favorite Songs: True North, Kingdom, More, Grace

18. Superstition- The Birthday Massacre (2014)
My love for New Wave has always been underlying, creeping up on me when I least expect it when Tears for Fears or Simple Minds comes on. I never purposely put this type of music on until one band came on my Pandora mix, and educated me about the relationship between Rock and New Wave and forever changed my life. The Birthday Massacre is an exemplary sleeper band that mixes Rock, Pop, New Wave, Dark Wave, Metal, and Goth in a very all-consuming way. This band took over years of my listening rotation and is still one of my most special favorites. They bring nostalgic vibes and sounds from the 80s and 90s and mix a whole new electronic resonance that is unlike anything I’ve ever heard before. Their use of real instruments in an Electro-Pop New Wave track is nothing short of brilliant, and then they bring heavy guitars and rhythmic nu-metal drums with songs like “Red Stars” and “Blue”. They have so many different sounds and different vibes, you never know what this band is going to do next. They’re one of the best and most surprising live bands I have ever seen in my life.
Picking one of their albums was difficult because I love nearly their whole discography. They put out consistently good music that sticks in your head for probably an eternity, they are just that good and catchy. I had to pick what I think is my most favorite album of theirs, and Superstitious was the obvious choice for me. It’s a perfect mix of Dark Wave and Rock as if it could’ve been released in the early 90s and probably would’ve dominated the charts. The Birthday Massacre created a huge atmospheric horror album with crisp and clear vocals by the seemingly effortless singer Chibi, and mixed it with great guitar riffs and pulsating deep synths. It’s such a cool record that is perfect for nighttime city cruising or late night art projects. “Destroyer” is perfect for an Indie Horror flick, to the point where the fans created a music video that is a mini horror and it’s absolutely iconic. Superstition is a mind bending album, sort of in the way Trip Hop is almost disorienting, and that’s why I love it so much. Anything that bends the mind and makes me think in a totally new way is my obsession. There’s immense darkness on this album, but as always Birthday Massacre throws a couple 80s Dance Pop tracks in there with “Oceania” which is an immensely fun syncopated song. Their throwback songs are some of my absolute favorites, despite liking the heavier side of music. I think this album is a perfect mix of their sound and a great place to start for anyone looking for something new, fresh, and unique to listen to. Superstition flows well, so you can just immerse yourself in it and not be jarred out of the atmosphere. Not many bands today are that immersive and interesting. I don’t think a lot of bands are as successful at immersive and themed albums as The Birthday Massacre. They just put out solid music that is truly easy to listen to, but is not repetitive or just fluff. It has a lot of good substance and self empowerment messages that are aimed at escapism from a sometimes all to harsh reality. I love this album and this band, and can’t recommend them enough for everyone looking for something outside of the box.
Favorite tracks; Destroyer, Superstition, The Other Side

19. Vena Sera- Chevelle (2007)
I know, I know it should be Wonder What’s Next?. I picked Vena Sera because it’s one of Chevelle’s heaviest albums, so naturally, it’s one of my favorites. Another Power Trio album, Vena Sera, perfectly reflects the desolation and Progressiveness of Tool, whilst keeping in the era of Alt-Rock without too many crazy time signatures. It’s an eloquent, no-filler Hard Rock album that I think has been slept on for a long time. This band never gets the recognition they deserve, like many Power Trios in Rock, they seem to fall under the radar. Luckily their cult following has made them a mainstay in the Hard Rock scene since 1996, making the band almost as old as I am. I had the pleasure of seeing this band in 2012 with Evanescence and Halestorm on the Carnival of Madness tour. They are still one of the best bands I have ever seen live, and I need to see them again. If you haven’t heard Chevelle before, I highly recommend starting with Vena Sera. Wonder What’s Next is great, too. Vena Sera just seems to stick in my head much more than any of their other records. However, you can’t go wrong with this band. Their entire discography is worth playing from front to back; It’s like a time capsule of Post-Grunge Rock and you can hear how much they influenced other bands like Taproot, Trapt, Cold, Evans Blue, and Adema. I don’t know if those bands particularly list Chevelle as an influence, but I can hear the influential style loud and clear.
What I love about this album is the lack of pretentiousness. The album is pure, raw, and simply just Hard Rock without any instrumental interludes or unnecessary breakdowns. It drives Chevelle’s unique style home and sets them apart from Tool. The longer you listen to Chevelle, the more you realize they don’t sound like anybody else. They’re Progressive, soul-crushingly dark, attack-driven, and smooth. The chemistry of the members and their ability to follow a bass line is what makes the album so hard-hitting. They took the bleak atmosphere of Tool and Depeche Mode and put Helmet-level riffs and drums over incredibly well-played bass lines. A lot of critics found this album to be monotonous or too blended, but I find it to be a complete work that just drives hard with great riffs, clear unique vocals, and impossibly good drums. I think Chevelle can create a unique atmosphere that encompasses a whole album, which is something you don’t hear in Rock often. It’s an album that becomes more complex and impactful the more you listen to it. I think that’s why critics were so hard on it; They took it as being a Radio Rock album, but it was never intended for such a hollow marketing target. When I think of great Rock records, Chevelle is always one of my first picks, and this album will always be sonically special to me and a big influence on the music I wish to create.
Favorite Tracks; Antisaint, Saferwaters, Well Enough Alone

20. Make Yourself- Incubus (1999)
Incubus is one of my most influential bands, being one of the many reasons I picked up the bass guitar, which would become my best instrument. This is one of the most unique Rock albums I have ever heard to this day. Incubus created an unreplicatable sound and atmosphere with every album they’ve ever put out. They mix California surfer/skater vibes with Hip Hop, Rock guitars, Funk and jazz-inspired bass, and immense groove. It’s not my usual style of music by any means, and it seems like they go out of their way to be odd. Yet, I love their music and it is such a central part of my life. Make Yourself is my favorite record because it’s all of Incubus extremified. It sounds like they broke down all barriers and genres with this record and made a quirky Alt-Rock record with live recorded vocals. Anything that dares to be different and immersive is my shtick, even if it isn’t my style of dark and moody heavy music. This record has a catalyst for good music and great bass lines. That’s why I was so drawn to their music in the first place. Original bassist “Dirk Lance” absolutely nailed the basslines and created a unique experience in Rock Music on Make Yourself. If you want to hone your bass chops, there are not many better bass records than this one. I am interested to see how touring bassist Nicole Row plays these iconic parts live and if she can channel the original deep tone with the perfect amount of fuzz and aggression. She is a great bassist and will no doubt nail the cadence. “Clean” of this album is one of my favorite basslines of all time, and I’d love to see it played live again.
Make Yourself is one of those records I put on when I want to feel happy to be alive. Incubus exudes happiness, love, and positivity without being preachy. They’ve balanced these “good vibes” with Nu-Metal guitar riffs from one of the most underrated guitarists ever, Mike Einzinger. I have no idea why this guy isn’t on lists for Nu-Metal and Rock because his riffs on this album are so iconic a whole generation can recognize the songs from one chord. “Drive” is just acoustic guitar, but it gets a crowd of eighty thousand singing along at Rock Am Ring. That’s such a powerful guitar voice that spans multiple generations. This band is so iconic, and yet still underrated. Singer Brandon Boyd is one of my favorite vocalists of all time and has immense chops and range, being able to switch from belt, to scream, to scat, to spoken word in one song. He is insanely talented and is well-versed in storytelling. “Stellar” is such a good example of the storytelling quality and emotion Boyd can provoke. That heart is something I don’t hear in nu-metal, and it’s what sets them apart from other bands at the time. The vulnerability and whimsicality of this band are more common to me In Progressive music, and maybe that’s why I like them so much. The drummer Jose Pasillas is also incredibly underrated for his groove and unrelenting hits. There’s a little bit of the Red Hot Chili Peppers, a little bit of The Who, a little bit of Sugarhill Gang, and just such an eclectic mix of music. Then, you hear “Pardon Me”, and it’s just mindblowing that this came out in 1999 and not ten years later. Make Yourself was truly ahead of its time and still holds up today as one of the most unique Rock records ever made. Listening to it again reminds me of how much I want to return to playing this kind of music and calm down on the Heavy Metal at breakneck speeds.
Honorable Mentions-
Light Grenades- Incubus
Mer De Noms- A Perfect Circle
Machine Head- Deep Purple
Songs For The Deaf- Queens Of The Stone Age
Mellon Collie and The Infinite Sadness – Smashing Pumpkins
Black Holes and Revelation- Muse
Keep Me Fed- The Warning
Brand New Eyes- Paramore
Lord of The Lost Announces New Covers Album


| [Photo Credit: Jan Season] |
The very first covers album by Germany’s #1 charting LORD OF THE LOST – honoring favorites by Michael Jackson, Judas Priest, Billy Idol & more!
Exactly one year after the release of their game changing #1 charting album, Blood & Glitter (Official German Album Charts), LORD OF THE LOST are coming back with their first ever covers album, Weapons Of Mass Seduction. The new album is a collection of songs that have inspired the band to bend genres. This double album wraps up the busiest and most successful year in the band’s history so far. In addition to storming the charts with their latest studio album, being invited by the legendary Iron Maiden as special guest on their European tour (again!), numerous sold-out headline shows, and opening gigs for Powerwolf and Amon Amarth, the band represented Germany at the Eurovision Song Contest Finals in Liverpool in May of this year. LORD OF THE LOST made it clear once again that they do not limit themselves when it comes to genre norms and influences. They’re wacky and weird and don’t follow any rules when it comes to music.
Today, the band unveils the opening track of their upcoming offering, an electrifying cover of Billy Idol’s “Shock To The System”! The song arrives with a perfectly fitting music video, underlining its attitude the best possible way. It’s a great cover and I was honestly impressed with the vocals as Billy Idol is an incredible singer. I didn’t expect to like it as I haven’t like their latest releases… but this cover is really well done. I wish the guitars were more pronounced and heavier, but it’s a polished 80’s sound that fits with the original.
Chris Harms on “Shock To The System”:
“I remember exactly when I heard this song for the first time. I was 13 years old, it was summer and I was sitting in the back of the Opel Manta convertible in which I drove to the open-air pool with my older sister and her boyfriend. Rarely has the energy of a single song gripped me so much. We’d like to give a little bit of that energy back with our tribute to Billy Idol and this song through our cover and accompanying video.”

While the album is entirely covers, Weapons Of Mass Seduction confirms LORD OF THE LOST’s creative ability to make even unexpected songs their own, and further confirms their status. The covers album comes in various different formats – some of them containing a second CD with 11 covers that are already released or have been played live. The deluxe boxset includes a third CD with 10 acoustic tracks, exclusively available in this format.
Weapons Of Mass Seduction Tracklist:
CD 1
- Shock To The System (Billy Idol Cover)
- Unstoppable (Sia Cover)
- Smalltown Boy (Bronski Beat Cover)
- Turbo Lover (Judas Priest Cover)
- Hymn (Ultravox Cover)
- Give In To Me (Michael Jackson Cover)
- River (Bishop Briggs Cover)
- Somewhere Only We Know (Keane Cover)
- (I Just) Died In Your Arms (feat. Anica Russo) (Cutting Crew Cover)
- High (Zella Day Cover)
- House On A Hill (The Pretty Reckless Cover)
CD 2
- The Look (feat. Blümchen) (Roxette Cover)
- Ordinary Town (Celebrate The Nun Cover)
- Cha Cha Cha (Käärijä Cover)
- Judas (Lady Gaga Cover)
- Children Of The Damned (Iron Maiden Cover)
- Wig In A Box (Hedwig and the Angry Inch Cover)
- Bad Romance (Lady Gaga Cover)
- The Most Radical Thing To Do (The Ark Cover)
- This Is The Life (Amy MacDonald Cover)
- It’s A Sin (Pet Shop Boys Cover)
- Ordinary World (Duran Duran Cover)
CD 3 – Ltd Deluxe Edition only
- Starman (David Bowie Cover)
- Girl, You’ll Be A Woman Soon (Neil Diamond Cover)
- The Days Of Pearly Spencer (David McWilliams Cover)
- Hey You (Pink Floyd Cover)
- I Had Too Much To Dream Last Night (The Electric Prunes Cover)
- Where Do You Go To My Lovely (Peter Sarstedt Cover)
- Turn! Turn! Turn! (To Everything There Is A Season) (The Byrds Cover)
- In The Year 2525 (Exordium & Terminus) (Zager & Evans Cover)
- All I Have To Do Is Dream (The Everly Brothers Cover)
- Perfect Day (Lou Reed Cover)
Weapons Of Mass Seduction will be available in the following formats:
- 3 CD Boxset, incl 2 CD 6 pages Digisleeve (Ltd Deluxe Edition) and CD 3 incl 10 acoustic songs, exclusively available in the Deluxe Box + pink Sweatband with black logo, sharped patch and sticker – Napalm Records Mailorder and LORDSHOP exclusive – strictly limited to 1000 copies worldwide
- 2 LP RECYCLED COLOR Vinyl – Die Hard Edition incl Slipmat, record butler and 12 inch booklet – Napalm Records Mailorder exclusive – strictly limited to 300 copies worldwide
- 2 LP RECYCLED COLOR Vinyl incl 12 inch booklet – LORDSHOP exclusive – strictly limited to 300 copies worldwide
- 2LP Gatefold RECYCLED BLACK Vinyl
- 2 CD 6 pages Digisleeve (Ltd Deluxe Edition), 12p booklet
- 1 CD 6 pages Digisleeve, 12p booklet
- Cassette (PINK w/ Black print) – Napalm Records Mailorder and LORDSHOP exclusive – strictly limited to 300 copies worldwide
- Digital Album
Weapons Of Mass Seduction features a wide range of songs from different eras and genres performed in true LORD OF THE LOST style, all surprisingly fitting for the band and hence forming a cohesive collection of covers. Classic heavy metal track “Turbo Lover”, originally by Judas Priest, meets modern pop hits in songs such as Sia’s “Unstoppable”, Bishop Briggs’ “River” and Zella Day’s “High”. Ultravox’ “Hymn”, followed by Michael Jackson’s legendary “Give In To Me” and Keane’s “Somewhere Only We Know”, expand the multifaceted selection even further. With added rougher elements such as heavier vocals, Bronski Beat’s captivating 80s electro pop hit “Smalltown Boy” gets a dark makeover in the hands of LORD OF THE LOST. The unit’s cover of another legendary 80s song, “(I Just) Died In Your Arms“, features a guest appearance from rising singer-songwriter Anica Russo, who also took part in Germany’s ESC 2023 preliminary round Unser Lied für Liverpool (EN: Our Song for Liverpool). An emotional version of The Pretty Reckless’ “House On A Hill” closes Weapons Of Mass Seduction impactful.
A special 2CD edition of the new covers album provides a cross-cut of covers previously released or already covered live over the course of LORD OF THE LOST’s career. Among them are the Roxette cover “The Look” feat. Blümchen – already known from Blood & Glitter – “Children Of The Damned”, a homage to Iron Maiden, with whom LORD OF THE LOST experienced intense times during the last two years, and the cover of the Finnish ESC song “Cha Cha Cha” by Käärijä – sung by Chris Harms completely in Finnish.
Get Your Copy of Weapons Of Mass Seduction NOW!
Metalcore: The Best Genre in 2022?
4/13/2022
10 minute read

Metalcore is often a genre overlooked by the elitists. Often the genre is associated with more “Emo” themes. That is simply a misnomer. Metalcore is arguably the most diverse of all subgenres. It is a broad subgenre with millions of possibilities; some bands have a Metal version of Punk Hardcore, some Extreme Metal with Meshuggah-Esque breakdowns. I was originally a naysayer of the subgenre. I expected whiny, high-pitched, off-key screams, and generic guitar riffs stolen from Killswitch Engage and All That Remains. Those derivative instances may exist, but the juggernauts of the new wave of Metalcore are reinventing the wheel. I became educated in Metalcore really fast upon my first listen of “Circle With Me” by budding Vancouver Island Progressive Metalcore band, Spiritbox. From there, my glass house of elitism was shattered forever.
Spiritbox’s Eternal Blue is the album that changed Metalcore forever but seemingly came out of nowhere. Between lineup changes and the pandemic, Spiritbox didn’t necessarily start successfully. They were unable to tour, put the new album together in the studio on the original timeline, and were forced to find a drummer remotely. The strife this band faced was formidable, but they turned it into something immensely positive. Eternal Blue is a true example of “pain turned into art”. It is a masterful record. It is beautiful, angry, tragic, and devastatingly good. It’s not what I expected; Holy Roller was a track that threw me off. It’s dense, abrasive, and completely heavy. It took me months to appreciate it. Once I heard Circle With Me, however, I immediately understood why this band went viral. Now, I can’t stop listening to Eternal Blue. The dramatic, sometimes bipolar, djent down-tuned chugging riffs to beautiful intricate melodies grabs every fiber of my being. I crave their sound to the point of obsession, and I think this album did the same thing to everyone who’s heard it.
There’s a wide spectrum of sound in Spiritbox that I’ve never heard before. It’s an assault of layers upon layers. Mike Stringer is known for maxing out the session data in Protools with these layers: Specifically on the beautifully heart-wrenching Alzheimer’s inspired track, Constance. This is the emotionally heaviest song I’ve heard in nearly fifteen years (Devin’s Deadhead takes the crown for me there). His musical composition is the most interesting I’ve heard since Devin Townsend. The way he aligns heavy guitars or melodic shredding with Courtney’s vocals is nothing short of visionary. Many bands have attempted this sonic chemistry, but Mike and Courtney have a cornerstone on the chemistry that I don’t think will ever be matched. This is why Eternal Blue is one of the greatest Metal records of all time and has brought Metalcore back to the forefront.
Once I became obsessed with Spiritbox, I went on to find other bands that shared a pension for Progressive Metalcore. Below is a list of bands that add to why I think Metalcore is the best subgenre in 2021 and 2022.
Architects

This may seem like an obvious name drop, as Architects have been dropping some of the best records in modern Metal for the last ten years. They write relatable, coarse, heavy, and melodic tracks with excellent breakdowns. They sit at the more aggressive end of Metalcore, with screaming and down-tuned guitars while staying accessible. The band has been millions of fans’ entry into the extensive world of Metalcore. Tracks like Minesweeper, Day in Day Out, and Doomsday are blisteringly heavy and coarse with newer addition Sam Carter’s style. His screams and cleans are drastically different from each other, to an almost bipolar level. Their music is catchy, but not repetitive or derivative. It truly sticks in your mind; Whether it’s a riff or a vocal hook, Architects becomes addictive just as well as Spiritbox. Josh Middleton, another newer addition officially joining in 2017, is a driving force on lead guitars. Coming from Progressive Metalcore powerhouse Sylosis, Josh has made his imprint on Architects’ riffs. I think the band has gained success due to the innovation of Sam and Josh’s contribution and unique styles. At least, I’ve enjoyed the band more since Middleton began riffing for them.
For Those Who Wish To Exist is the latest from Architects. Released at the height of Covid on February 26th, 2021, this is one of the most poignant records of the decade. In my opinion, this record is a momentous record for all of music. The album is one of the heaviest records to climb the US Billboard charts in my lifetime. It got the recognition and credit it deserved for tracks like Black Lungs, Animals, and Dead Butterflies all frequenting successful Satellite radio. This record is not what I consider radio-friendly, but it is deeply relatable and tragically accurate for Covid-19’/s terrorist reign on the world. It captures the loss, the loneliness, the falling to addiction, and the rage for stupidity amongst the human race. I unequivocally love this record and find it to be the highlight of Architects’ career.
https://architectsofficial.com/
ERRA

Talk about underrated bands that seemingly come out of nowhere; the Progressive Metalcore scientists Erra hit me like a god damned truck. These guys put out harsh rap vocal lines over smooth clean choruses, right before obliterating breakdowns. Jesse Cash on vocals and guitars has written some of my absolute favorite riffs of all time. Dancing between Killswitch, Tool, and Meshuggah’s off-beat chugging, it’s a savory ride of guitar flavors that I am always impressed by. It’s impossible to get bored of Erra’s irregular and entropic music. It switches between fast down-tuned riffs, atmospheric interludes, and catchy vocals over blast beats. There’s also melodic shredding underneath the chunky riffs; a contrast I absolutely love. Cash and company compose songs with such deliberation and care so it flows through you like a symphony. I appreciate the music, but the lyrics are even more of a reason to listen to Erra. They eloquently talk about death, astronomy, psychology, neurology, societal issues with technological advancement, mythology, and mental health. Their storytelling and emotional transparency are what sets this band apart from all other Metalcore bands for me.
Erra, the self-titled record, is an astounding mix in a plethora of titillating ways. It’s grinding, blue-collar chuggy, and then refined and technical, and then warm and heartfelt. It’s surprisingly heavy, but the dynamics and smooth changes are what make it an essential Metalcore album. Snowblood opens with speed and breakdown shreds, continuing into equally disjointed Gungrave with an absolutely devastating breakdown at the end, and then it breaks and surprises into Melodic Divisionary. House of Glass is where the Prog shines through and captures me more than the Metalcore aspects. There’s a blinding ode to Tool in this song that is mouthwatering and unexpected. There’s a break in the music and this perfect off-time riff pre-verse that blows my mind every time I hear it. I won’t spoil the rest of the easter eggs in this brilliant record, but it’s a must-listen all the way through.
Essential Tracks: Snowblood, Vanish Canvas ft. Courtney LaPlante, Monolith
Periphery

I doubt there’s a Modern Metal fan in America that hasn’t heard of Periphery, but just in case you need an incentive to listen to Prog Metalcore juggernauts Periphery, I’ll spell it out for you. Washington D.C may not be progressive these days, but at least it has birthed one of the greats of Progressive Metalcore. I have yet to see a band in the genre with more lineup changes, which is off-putting for me. It can cause inconsistencies and identity confusion, making the music derivative. Not with these guys. They are a band who have only improved with changes and time. The current lineup is a perfect medley of styles, technical ability, and some of the best musical chemistry I’ve ever seen. Periphery IV: Hail Stan is an album for the ages that went nearly viral. It is one of the highest-ranking Progressive Metalcore albums of the century, and rightly so.
While Spencer Sotelo’s vocals took a while for me to warm up to, it was their live videos that grabbed my attention. While some male vocalists in the upper register lose tonal quality and pitch control in a live setting, Spencer is an absolute rock. I am baffled by the lack of reaction videos to Spencer’s live and in-studio performances. His range and steadiness in infinite style changes and emotional dynamics are unbelievable. This is demonstrated best in the song Reptile, one of the craziest songs I have ever heard. His ability to keep up with the virtuoso composition while staying very current is unprecedented. He makes me angry. He makes me smile. And, he even makes me teary. Lune is one of the most beautiful vocal performances I have heard and destroys me every time I hear it.
Are three guitarists too many? Ask yourself that, and then listen to Misha Mansoor, Mark Holcomb, and Jake Bowen. Three very distinctive and different guitarists that ebb and flow and layer over one another flawlessly. The guitar riffs dance over Matt Halpern’s metronomic and catchy beats. Halpern has a pension for creating a perfect and effortless pocket, most evident in songs like It’s Only Smiles, Marigold, and Flatline. This band is one of the most talented bands I’ve ever heard, without being cheesy and neoclassical. Three technical shredding and beautifully melodic, atop a hell of an inventive drummer, underneath one of the most diverse vocalists I’ve ever heard; it’s a recipe for brilliance. This recipe is profoundly shown in Satellites, a song of their career, in my opinion. Not a fan of Metalcore? Listen to these guys, and you’ll be hooked for life.
Essential Tracks: Marigold, Satellites, Reptile, It’s Only Smiles, Alpha
Monuments

On the heavier side of Metalcore, Monuments brings it hard and groovy. These guys have a lot of similarities to Periphery, but a completely different feel to the music. As a drum nerd, Monuments fills a need that no other band on this list can; a flair for flam. The use of flam on the snare adds urgency and a unique flavor to the music. Mike Malyan has an unexampled take on Metalcore drumming; it’s more of a Punk or Post Rock style that shows exceptional technicality. He can also blast well. The whole band is a quartet of sleepers. You’d never expect the caliber of a technical ability underneath the catchiness and softness of some radio-friendly tracks. Monuments is an interesting mix of styles. I had never truly listened to them until researching for this article, but they have piqued my interest. While they can be blistering and grinding heavy, they can also be almost sweetly melodic. The mix is crazy, but it works on every song I’ve heard so far.
I’ve found that most singular vocalists in Metalcore have bipolar styles. Howard Jones from KSE days had his unique belt and soaring vocals to supreme gutturals and harmonic screams. M Shadows of Avenged Sevenfold is another upper-level example of the range in Metalcore. Andy Cizek, the new addition in 2019 after the sad and unexpected departure of Chris Barretto, is a powerhouse of melodic and rhythmic texture. Andy has a hell of an upper range. It may not be for everyone, as it leans towards a twangy side of cleans, but I appreciate his quick switch from high twang to almost gutturals.
Despite the heaviness and melodic twang vocals, I believe Monuments is a great introduction to Metalcore for people that usually listen to Punk or Rock, which is really what Metalcore is all about. It’s a transition between old hardcore and Modern Metal. Bands like Monuments could bring Metal back to the forefront where it belongs; Celebrated and appreciated. Their new album, In Stasis, drops tomorrow April 14th, and I highly recommend checking it out.
Essential Tracks: False Providence, Cardinal Red, Animus, Stygian Blue
Veil of Maya

A Deathcore band turned Metalcore, Chicago quartet Veil of Maya, have created their own style of Metal. If Periphery and Lorna Shore had an atmospheric baby, this band would be the maniacal product. Some tracks such as newer Viscera, Mikasa, and Members-Only remind me of European bands like The Unguided and Amaranthe. There are electronic and atmospheric aspects underneath yelling Punk vocals, and then full-on breakdowns with rhythmic screaming. The tracks are pretty chaotic and may be hard to follow at times. This is not your entry-level Metalcore band and is not necessarily my style, but there’s a lot to appreciate with Veil of Maya. Definitely check out Spanish beat-based Danger featuring legendary guitarist Jeff Loomis.
Essential Tracks: Doublespeak, Viscera, Outsider
Wage War

Wage War, the breakout band on Sirius XM Octane, is the quintessential mix of Hardcore and Melodic Metal band that illustrates Modern Metalcore at its height. They have a wide range of tracks that show what they’re capable of. Some songs echo A Day To Remember, some echo Killswitch Engage’s new era, and some echo the heavy breakdowns of Spiritbox. Where technicality may be forefront in the others on this list, Wage War is more brutal and Slipknot with their heaviness. They have no regard for song structure on songs like Stitch. It’s just all-out brutality and searingly slow breakdowns with strings flapping against fretboards, and I love it.
While most of the hit songs are not my desired flavor of Metalcore, deeper cuts are insanely tasty. Yet another American band, hailing from Ocala, Florida, is bringing Metalcore back to the masses. Wage War has already scored a tour with Three Days Grace in July. It’s a huge billing for them and will hopefully gain them even more respect amongst American Metalheads.
Essential Tracks: Take The Fight, Circle the Drain, Relapse, Surrounded
Any Given Day

One day whilst browsing Youtube for good covers, I stumbled upon a rugby-player-looking big-necked dude in a black suit beautifully singing Diamonds by Rihanna. I almost closed the browser, until that scream and riffing hit, and my jaw unhinged. German Hardcore/Melodic Metalcore band Any Given Day went viral with this shockingly beautiful but heavy cover, and I fell in love with Dennis Diehl’s smooth delivery. This huge man has the sweetest and smoothest clean vocal I’ve heard since Howard Jones but has wicked gutturals rarely heard in Metalcore. His voice is stunning, mesmerizing on songs like Apocalypse, Home is Where the Heart Is, and Farewell. While very heavy and containing many breakdowns, they are one of the more melodic bands along with Spiritbox on this list.
This band is not a one-trick pony or formulaic, no two songs sound similar to me. It’s a very diverse and emotionally ranged catalog. They have breakdowns, rapping grunting vocals, and down-tuned guitars that echo the Hardcore veins of the band. The Melodic parts are echoing Killswitch Engage, Trivium, and heartful songs from All That Remains. Any Given Day incorporates guitar layering instead of Electronic effects for atmosphere, and that is something I appreciate. I love their flavor of Metalcore and hope they gain more popularity in the states for a North American tour billing.
Essential Tracks; Arise Ft. Matt Heafy of Trivium, Home Is Where the Heart is, Savior
https://arising-empire.com/artists/any-given-day
Honorable Mentions:
Northlane
Northlane – Carbonized [Official Music Video]
Conquer Divide
Conquer Divide – “Atonement” (Official Audio)
Bad Omens
BAD OMENS – THE DEATH OF PEACE OF MIND (Official Music Video)
More Metalcore: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_metalcore_bands
